Profile: Steve Tolleson played 29 games for the Orioles in 2012, and struck out 17 times in 71 at-bats, while posting a .236 wOBA. He’s got a non-roster invitation to Chicago White Sox camp, and is guaranteed to never, ever, be on your fantasy team. (Navin Vaswani)

Profile: What do you call a guy who is below the likes of Ryan Goins and Maicer Izturis on a team's depth chart? Nothing, since you probably should not be aware of him at all. If Tolleson was 23 instead of 31 then he might be a bit interesting, but he is a career utility infielder, and not much of one at that. He rarely walks, strikes out all the time, and was lucky to get 189 plate appearances for the Blue Jays last year. Who knows, maybe Goins and Izturis will get into a deadly knife fight after a "who sucks more" argument turns ugly during Spring Training and Tolleson will be the last man standing and fall into second base playing time. So there's that. That's not much less credible than Goins and/or Izturis providing acceptable production at second this season, right? But seriously, folks... wait, am I joking? Here's the word: second base at Rogers Centre is a toxic waste dump to be avoided. (Matt Klaassen)

The Quick Opinion: Steve Tolleson is not obviously the worst option at second base for the 2015 Blue Jays. He probably is, but we cannot be all that sure. That says something about everything. Avoid.

Profile: Which type of replacement level player hangs around the longest: "catch and throw" backup catchers, left-handed relievers, or utility infielders? Steve Tolleson is in the last category. He is 32, has just 363 major league plate appearances despite being drafted back in 2005, and has been with six different organizations (including multiple stints with several). Yep, Tolleson is a journeyman. Despite (or maybe because of) the Blue Jays' brutal middle infield situation, Tolleson got just 45 plate appearances in 2015. He hit pretty well at .268/.333/.439, but, yeah, sample size and all that. Tolleson signed a minor league deal with Baltimore than includes a spring training invite for a big reunion with one of his many former organizations. What a story! No fantasy value. (Matt Klaassen)

The Quick Opinion: If there were a fantasy league including only minor league journeymen, then Steve Tolleson would have solid value. Otherwise, uh, no.

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